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We want another 'Cameron-wave'

Maximising European immigration into Britain

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J’accuse
Feb 16, 2026
∙ Paid

Many things distinguish my politics faceposting advocates of ‘remigration’ on X, but most of all it is that I do not believe in the civic construction of ‘British’, I recognise only the European.

To put that conceptual difference into practical terms, if I were to become Prime Minister tomorrow, you would not see beautiful women who happen to have one Swedish grandmother bundles into trains and deported through the Eurotunnel back to Stockholm, as you would with ‘sensible nationalists’.

Quite the opposite, in fact. Any man who has been to a nightclub in Östermalm can tell you that such women, if anything, deserve special privileges over much ‘Anglo-celtic’ stock. But it is not just sexual fixation. I consider myself post-national in the way that Ted X talkers at the turn of the century assumed my generation would be, having grown up on the internet I consider distinctions between White people in the United States, Australia or France to be entirely superfluous, as they are on the World Wide Web.

In that respect I have something in common with David Cameron. It has been noted by others that during the Cameron years, contra the simplistic narrative that the Tories simply did not care about immigration, that Non-EU immigration hugely declined whilst migration from the EU skyrocketed.

A graph of the same number of countries/regions

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Whilst the Blair period (1997-2006) is often remembered for Polish migration (think Café Polski) it was actually migration from Africa and Asia which skyrocketed during his premiership. Entire nationalities established communities in Britain during this time, a quarter of Somalians recorded in the census 2011 arrived between 2001 and 2003 as an example. It is only in the final third of Blair that we see EU migration become significantly positive.

Cameron flipped this around, in his five years as Prime Minister he brought non-EU net migration down significantly whilst boosting EU migration. Non-EU migration fell by a third between 2010 and 2013. You will note on the linked press release (dated 2014) that it also celebrates EU migration ‘including nationals from France, Germany and Spain’ increasing.

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